The 4th edition of your textbook gave me a good grounding in pathology for massage textbooks. Thank you for providing students with such a great resource.
I have a question I am having trouble finding an answer to, however. A new client, treated yesterday, presented with a severely rounded ribcage. When prone with his shoulders flat on the table, his ribcage is round as a beer keg, inches higher than his shoulders and his scapula. Other than a trigger point in serratus posterior superior, and another in one teres minor, no pain is involved.
At 60 after a lifetime of sedentary living, he has been training with the weights and is dieting. He does several sets of barbell bench presses twice per week; his pec major were slightly hypertonic, his anterior delts were not well developed and his rear delts were almost nonexistent. I advised him to begin (cautioning against overwork) working rear delts and rhomboids, etc.
I know how to treat rounded shoulders. But this rounded ribcage seems degrees worse than that. Might this be a symptom of a potentially serious medical condition? Your advice?
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Hi, Ruth.
The 4th edition of your textbook gave me a good grounding in pathology for massage textbooks. Thank you for providing students with such a great resource.
I have a question I am having trouble finding an answer to, however. A new client, treated yesterday, presented with a severely rounded ribcage. When prone with his shoulders flat on the table, his ribcage is round as a beer keg, inches higher than his shoulders and his scapula. Other than a trigger point in serratus posterior superior, and another in one teres minor, no pain is involved.
At 60 after a lifetime of sedentary living, he has been training with the weights and is dieting. He does several sets of barbell bench presses twice per week; his pec major were slightly hypertonic, his anterior delts were not well developed and his rear delts were almost nonexistent. I advised him to begin (cautioning against overwork) working rear delts and rhomboids, etc.
I know how to treat rounded shoulders. But this rounded ribcage seems degrees worse than that. Might this be a symptom of a potentially serious medical condition? Your advice?
Welcome Ruth, keep up the good work :)